For paramedics, nurses, A&E staff, and all HCPs

Often enough, I might imagine, what with accidents around the home and at work.

How about people who have intentionally hurt themselves?

Self-harm is an umbrella term that encompasses all sorts of behaviours, including eating disorders, alcohol and drug misuse, and self-injury.

Self-injury is directly hurting one’s self, with the intention of relieving emotional distress. Healthcare professionals often assume this means cutting the skin, but you might find people who bang themselves, or pick, scratch, or burn themselves.

Most people who hurt themselves like this bandage their own wounds, even if a cut really needs stitches to heal better. Sometimes people get taken to A&E by a loved one, or occasionally take themselves if they’re really frightened about blood loss, nerve damage, or the pain.

You might, at times, get called out to someone in distress. Maybe the blood flow hasn’t stopped, or maybe a family member is really worried and upset. Although you have many more life-threatening calls to attend to, I know you’ll treat everyone with compassion and respect. I might guess, though, that you could feel somewhat frustrated, and I wanted to talk about how important your approach could be. Each of us has mental health – just as you have physical health that fluctuates through the months and years, you have mental health too. Perhaps you talk about stress. Maybe you don’t think about it too much yourself, but I hope you agree that mental resilience is crucial to your role.

While self-injury ‘helps’ a person deal with their turbulent emotions, it is of course a maladaptive coping mechanism. Yet, it is a coping mechanism still. The person you’re attending to might feel it’s the only resort they have when overwhelmed by negative feelings. They might be in a dire situation in real-life, and not know how to handle things at all. They don’t have to have a mental illness to resort to self-injury.

Because self-injury is such a secretive behaviour, you might be one of the first to discover that your patient hurts themself. The way you approach their care could either inspire them to accept further help in the future, or confirm (in their mind) that they need to hide.

Then again, you might come across people who frequently call for help. I can imagine this is frustrating for every professional that has to repeatedly help. I can only suggest that such individuals need more than patching – they need support to learn alternative coping strategies. Something we talk about a lot at LifeSIGNS.

LifeSIGNS is the charitable organisation I founded in 2002 to help raise awareness in the UK about self-injury. From awareness, we move to understanding. We have several fact sheets available, for HCPs like yourself, for people who self-injure, and their family members.

LifeSIGNS offers information and guidance to people of all ages affected by self-injury. Everything we do is online, and I hope you’ll find our information worthy of passing on.

The 1st of March is Self-Injury Awareness Day (#SIAD) and so lots of people choose to talk about their self-injury on the 1st, and lots of people raise awareness through February. SIAD has been going for something like 15 years, and is pretty much global. LifeSIGNS is the number one supporter.

If you’d like to find out more, or direct people to our services, you can find us on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Share this post?

About author

Wedge

LifeSIGNS was launched in 2002 to raise awareness about self-injury and provide guidance and support for anyone affected by self-injury. As well as our extensive main website our organisation has grown across the popular social networks. Find us on Facebook,Tumblr and Twitter. We hope you enjoy the ideas and news within our blog and always appreciate your comments.